Linux Smart Enumeration – tool for pentesting and CTFs
First, a couple of useful oneliners 😉
wget "https://github.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/raw/master/lse.sh" -O lse.sh;chmod 700 lse.sh
curl "https://github.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/raw/master/lse.sh" -Lo lse.sh;chmod 700 lse.sh
Note that since version 2.10
you can serve the script to other hosts with the -S
flag!
linux-smart-enumeration
Linux enumeration tools for pentesting and CTFs
This project was inspired by https://github.com/rebootuser/LinEnum and uses many of its tests.
Unlike LinEnum, lse
tries to gradualy expose the information depending on its importance from a privesc point of view.
What is it?
This shell script will show relevant information about the security of the local Linux system, helping to escalate privileges.
From version 2.0 it is mostly POSIX compliant and tested with shellcheck
and posh
.
It can also monitor processes to discover recurrent program executions. It monitors while it is executing all the other tests so you save some time. By default it monitors during 1 minute but you can choose the watch time with the -p
parameter.
It has 3 levels of verbosity so you can control how much information you see.
In the default level you should see the highly important security flaws in the system. The level 1
(./lse.sh -l1
) shows interesting information that should help you to privesc. The level 2
(./lse.sh -l2
) will just dump all the information it gathers about the system.
By default it will ask you some questions: mainly the current user password (if you know it 😉 so it can do some additional tests.
How to use it?
The idea is to get the information gradually.
First you should execute it just like ./lse.sh
. If you see some green yes!
, you probably have already some good stuff to work with.
If not, you should try the level 1
verbosity with ./lse.sh -l1
and you will see some more information that can be interesting.
If that does not help, level 2
will just dump everything you can gather about the service using ./lse.sh -l2
. In this case you might find useful to use ./lse.sh -l2 | less -r
.
You can also select what tests to execute by passing the -s
parameter. With it you can select specific tests or sections to be executed. For example ./lse.sh -l2 -s usr010,net,pro
will execute the test usr010
and all the tests in the sections net
and pro
.
Use: ./lse.sh [options]
OPTIONS
-c Disable color
-i Non interactive mode
-h This help
-l LEVEL Output verbosity level
0: Show highly important results. (default)
1: Show interesting results.
2: Show all gathered information.
-s SELECTION Comma separated list of sections or tests to run. Available
sections:
usr: User related tests.
sud: Sudo related tests.
fst: File system related tests.
sys: System related tests.
sec: Security measures related tests.
ret: Recurren tasks (cron, timers) related tests.
net: Network related tests.
srv: Services related tests.
pro: Processes related tests.
sof: Software related tests.
ctn: Container (docker, lxc) related tests.
Specific tests can be used with their IDs (i.e.: usr020,sud)
-e PATHS Comma separated list of paths to exclude. This allows you
to do faster scans at the cost of completeness
-p SECONDS Time that the process monitor will spend watching for
processes. A value of 0 will disable any watch (default: 60)
-S Serve the lse.sh script in this host so it can be retrieved
from a remote host.
Is it pretty?
Usage demo
Also available in webm video
Level 0 (default) output sample
Level 1 verbosity output sample
Level 2 verbosity output sample
Examples
Direct execution oneliners
bash <(wget -q -O - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/master/lse.sh) -l2 -i
bash <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration/master/lse.sh) -l1 -i
Buy me a beer
Feel free to buy me a beer if this script was useful ;)
₿: 1DNBZRAzP6WVnTeBPoYvnDtjxnS1S8Gnxk
Original repository: https://github.com/diego-treitos/linux-smart-enumeration
The post Linux Smart Enumeration – tool for pentesting and CTFs appeared first on Hakin9 – IT Security Magazine.